An integrated semiconductor device enabling non-optical genome sequencing

2011 Nature 2,132 citations

Abstract

The seminal importance of DNA sequencing to the life sciences, biotechnology and medicine has driven the search for more scalable and lower-cost solutions. Here we describe a DNA sequencing technology in which scalable, low-cost semiconductor manufacturing techniques are used to make an integrated circuit able to directly perform non-optical DNA sequencing of genomes. Sequence data are obtained by directly sensing the ions produced by template-directed DNA polymerase synthesis using all-natural nucleotides on this massively parallel semiconductor-sensing device or ion chip. The ion chip contains ion-sensitive, field-effect transistor-based sensors in perfect register with 1.2 million wells, which provide confinement and allow parallel, simultaneous detection of independent sequencing reactions. Use of the most widely used technology for constructing integrated circuits, the complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) process, allows for low-cost, large-scale production and scaling of the device to higher densities and larger array sizes. We show the performance of the system by sequencing three bacterial genomes, its robustness and scalability by producing ion chips with up to 10 times as many sensors and sequencing a human genome.

Keywords

ScalabilityDNA sequencingIntegrated circuitMassively parallelCMOSComputer scienceRobustness (evolution)NanotechnologyMaterials scienceOptoelectronicsDNABiologyGeneGeneticsParallel computing

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Publication Info

Year
2011
Type
article
Volume
475
Issue
7356
Pages
348-352
Citations
2132
Access
Closed

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Jonathan M. Rothberg, Wolfgang Hinz, Todd M. Rearick et al. (2011). An integrated semiconductor device enabling non-optical genome sequencing. Nature , 475 (7356) , 348-352. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature10242

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DOI
10.1038/nature10242